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Fatou Sow

DAWN Board member

Bio

Professor Sow is a renowned Senegalese sociologist and pioneer of gender studies and African feminism, who has worked at the forefront of women’s rights in West Africa and beyond for more than half a century. Born in Dakar, Senegal, in 1941 she was among the very few women to enter university in Senegal at the time when the former French colony gained its independence. She later worked as a researcher at the CNRS in Paris, where she began her doctoral studies. After receiving her PhD in sociology at the Sorbonne in 1969, Fatou Sow returned to Dakar and took up a position at the Institut Fondamental d’Afrique Noire (IFAN) at Cheikh Anta Diop University. The mid-1970s marked the beginning of her extraordinary and unabated commitment to the cause of African women in- and outside of academia. She held several visiting professorships in Canada and the United States and was instrumental in putting gender on the agenda of the Council for the Development of Social Sciences in Africa (CODESRIA) in the 1980s. In the early 1990s, she became a member of the CNRS-based Laboratoire Sedet of Denis Diderot University in Paris, where she received her Research Director Habilitation in sociology. Fatou Sow played a key role in the formation and development of African Feminist Studies. Her incisive situated analyses of women's lives in francophone West Africa have challenged colonial and post-colonial prejudices for more than half a century. During this time, she attended innumerable academic and activist events all over the globe, incessantly tackling questions of gender justice, violence against women, women’s mobilization and political participation, and women’s rights in Africa and in Muslim contexts in her keynotes, lectures, and other appearances. Professor Sow is the second person to be awarded The Bayreuth International Graduate School of African Studies (BIGSAS) honorary doctorate.

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